This past
Sunday, we celebrated the Solemnity of the Most Holy Trinity. We consider the
incomprehensible Unity in Trinity and Trinity in Unity – three Persons in one
God and one God in three Persons. Each wholly and entirely God, and yet not
three Gods, but one God, one divine nature, one divine essence.
Reflecting
upon the unity of the three divine Persons, we will quickly see that there is
no obedience within the Trinity. The Son is not obedient to the Father, neither
is the Holy Spirit obedient to the Father and the Son, but these three are
bound in a perfect mutual enjoyment and love – “And the more love is one, the
more it is love.” (St John of the Cross, Romances
on “In the Beginning was the Word”)
St.
Gregory of Nazianzus has proposed this dogma for our belief: “Above all guard
for me this great deposit of faith for which I live and fight, which I want to
take with me as a companion, and which makes me bear all evils and despise all
pleasures: I mean the profession of faith in the Father and the Son and the
Holy Spirit. I entrust it to you today. By it I am soon going to plunge you
into water and raise you up from it. I give it to you as the companion and
patron of your whole life. I give you but one divinity and power, existing one
in three, and containing the three in a distinct way. Divinity without
disparity of substance or nature, without superior degree that raises up or inferior
degree that casts down. . . the infinite co-naturality of three infinites. Each
person considered in himself is entirely God. . . the three considered
together. . . I have not even begun to think of unity when the Trinity bathes
me in its splendour. I have not even begun to think of the Trinity when unity
grasps me. . .” (Oratio 40,41; CCC 256)
One Divine Nature, One Divine Intellect, One
Divine Will
Though,
in God, there are three Persons, yet there is only one divine intellect and one
divine will (just as there is only one divine nature). As the intellect and
will are powers of an individual nature, we must affirm (speaking analogously)
that the one divine nature necessitates only one divine intellect and one
divine will.
It is not
that the Father has a will, the Son another will, the Holy Spirit yet another
will. Rather the will of the Father is the will of the Son and the will of the
Holy Spirit, even as the nature of the Father is the nature of the Son and the
nature of the Holy Spirit. Only the Person
of the Father is different from the Person
of the Son and from the Person of the
Holy Spirit – in every other respect, these three are one.
Compared to the mystery of the Incarnation
Hence, we
recognize a certain inverse relation between the mysteries of the Trinity and of
the Incarnation: In God there are three Persons but only one nature, intellect,
and will; but in Christ there are two natures, intellects, and wills while
there is yet only one Person. For the Lord Jesus has an human intellect and an
human will (even has he has an human Heart), but he also has a divine intellect
and a divine will (which is the intellect and will of the Father and the Holy Spirit).
Jesus has an human nature (assumed only by the Second Person of the Trinity and
not shared in by the Father and the Holy Spirit), but he also has a divine
nature (which is common to all three Persons of the Trinity and wholly
possessed by each and by all).
From
this, we ought to conclude that there is no direct or necessary relation between
person and nature – three Persons may be in one nature, as one Person may be in
two natures. Likewise, we see that neither intellect nor will constitute a
person – for the one divine intellect and will is in three Persons, while the
two intellects and wills of Jesus are in one Person.
Therefore, no obedience
Obedience,
however, is the subjection of one’s will to the will of another. For a man to
be obedient is to move his will to choose that which is desired by the will of another.
A soldier is obedient to his general when he chooses what his general chooses,
precisely because his general chooses it. A son is obedient to his father when
he subjects his personal will/choice/desire to the will/choice/desire of his
father.
Therefore,
obedience requires at least two wills, and where there is only one will there
can be no obedience. Thus, it is clear that there can be no obedience in the
Trinity – the Son cannot obey the
Father, since his divine will is the very divine will of the Father; and the
Holy Spirit cannot obey the Father
and the Son, because his will is the very same will which is possessed by the
Father and the Son. Where there is only
one single will, and one single nature, there can be no obedience – but only
simple love.
The obedience of Christ in his humanity
“And
whereas indeed he was the Son of God, he learned obedience by the things which
he suffered” (Hebrews 5:8)
We must
admit that, in his humanity, our Lord Jesus Christ is obedient to the Father.
Indeed, this is possible precisely because through the incarnation the Eternal
Son has assumed an human nature together with an human will. This human will is
subject in obedience to the Father.
It is
most fruitful to realize, moreover, that the obedience which Jesus Christ in his humanity shows to the Father, he
also shows to the Holy Spirit and also to himself in
his divinity. If Jesus as man is
obedient to the Father, this means that he subjects his human will to the divine
will – but this divine will is not the will only of the Father but also of the
Son and of the Holy Spirit. This means that Jesus as man is obedient to himself as
God, even as he is obedient to the Father and to the Holy Spirit.
However,
although Jesus does obey the divine will by the subjection his human will, we
must never think of an obedience within the Trinity proper. No, although the obedience
of Christ is an act of a divine Person, it is an act performed from his human
nature – and therefore, we must still affirm that in God and in the Trinity
there is no obedience. And yet, it is true that through a marvelous condescension,
one of the divine Persons has taken on an human nature so as to become
obedient!
It is
clear enough that this human obedience of Christ cannot be construed as introducing
obedience to the inner life of the Trinity insofar as the human obedience of
Jesus is an obedience offered not only to the Father, but also to the Holy
Spirit and even to himself as God –
In his Sacred Heart, God the Son offers a perfect act of obedience and worship
to the Trinity.
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Below is
a sermon on the mystery of the Trinity, by Father Ryan Erlenbush (Corpus Christi
Parish, Great Falls, MT)
Listen
online [here]!
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